What I learned from reading A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age by Jimmy Soni and Rob Goodman
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[0:25] Claude Shannon trained a powerful intellect on topics of deep interest, and continued to do so beyond the point of short term practicality
[5:50] Insulated from opinion of all kinds
[9:09] A simple way to describe the impact of information theory
[10:39] Resourceful at a young age
[11:50] An ordinary childhood
[12:41] Follow your natural drift
[14:40] Too many facts; too few principles
[16:10] His indecisive nature inadvertently helps him
[17:00] An important turning point in Shannon’s life
[18:30] Vannevar Bush: The first person to see Claude Shannon for who he was
[21:00] The results of Claude Shannon’s thesis
[23:20] How Claude Shannon worked in his 20s
[25:30] The main takeaway from the book: The world isn’t there to be used, but to be played with, manipulated by hand and mind
[30:00] Succeeding with no prior knowledge in the specific field
[31:20] Working on what naturally interests you is time well spent
[32:45] Working at Bell Labs / The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation
[36:49] Fire Control / What he worked on during the war
[38:15] Claude Shannon’s work on cryptography
[40:05] Take many different ideas from unrelated fields
[43:35] Leaving Bell Labs for MIT
[48:52] Claude Shannon on investing
[1:01:15] Shannon’s design for his own funeral
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